County In recent years, since the 1990s, the Democratic Party has been dominant in Douglas County. Democrats control all County-wide offices in the county. Douglas County is currently served by county commissioners Patrick Kelly, Shannon Reid, Karen Willey, Gene Dorsey, and Erica Anderson, all Democrats. According to the Kansas Secretary of State's office, as of July 2021, there were 35,146 registered Democrats, 22,324 registered Republicans, 900 registered Libertarians, and 21,474 Independents in the county.
State Democratic state representatives representing portions of the county include
Eileen Horn (10th District),
Barbara Ballard (44th District),
Mike Amyx (45th District), and
Dennis Highberger (46th District); Republican state representatives include
Jim Karleskint (42nd District), and
Ken Corbet (54th District). The three state senators representing the county,
Marci Francisco (2nd District),
Tom Holland (3rd District), and
Anthony Hensley (19th District), are all Democrats.
Presidential elections Douglas County has a political history more typical of
Vermont and
Maine than of the Great Plains. This is due to the county's strong New England roots. It voted for the Republican candidate in every presidential election between 1864 and 1960, except in 1912 when the GOP was mortally divided and the county supported
Progressive Theodore Roosevelt. Roosevelt would later rejoin the GOP. The county reverted to form and gave Republican presidential nominees over 60 percent of the vote in every election between 1920 and 1960 (except 1932 when
Herbert Hoover received 58.7 percent). Notably, it was one of the few counties where
Franklin D. Roosevelt was shut out in all four of his successful campaigns for president; in FDR's national landslide of 1936, Douglas was his weakest county and the second-best for Republican nominee and Kansas Governor
Alf Landon. This tradition was broken in 1964, when the conservative sentiment and Western origins of
Barry Goldwater drove the county into
Lyndon B. Johnson's hands, making Johnson the first Democrat ever to carry the county. Even then, however, Goldwater managed 45 percent of the county's vote. With more moderate GOP candidates, the GOP carried the county in every election between 1968 and 1988. During this time,
Jimmy Carter in 1976 and
Michael Dukakis in 1988 were the only Democrats to come reasonably close to carrying the county. However, the growing transformation of Lawrence into a liberal academic center has pulled the county into the Democratic column in every election since 1992. This was typical of many counties around the country dominated by college towns. In 2004,
John Kerry became only the second Democrat to win a majority of the county's vote. Since then, Douglas County has been one of the most Democratic counties in Kansas; only
Wyandotte County has been more Democratic. In 2016, 2020, and 2024, for instance,
Donald Trump turned in the worst showings on record for a Republican in the county without the presence of a credible third-party challenger on the ballot.
Laws The county overwhelmingly voted "No" on the
2022 Kansas abortion referendum, an anti-abortion ballot measure, by 81% to 19%, outpacing its support of
Joe Biden during the
2020 presidential election.
Law enforcement The Douglas County Sheriff's office has two divisions, Corrections, which operates a 185-bed jail, and Operations. The Operations Division includes a dive team, a patrol, and a warrants unit. The department works with other local police agencies at the
University of Kansas,
Lawrence Police Department,
Eudora, and
Baldwin City. the sheriff is Jay T. Armbrister. ==Education==